USRREC
Purpose
This statement defines the passwords for the users who need to schedule native jobs to run on Windows™ workstations, or who want to use this feature when defining job types with advanced options that will run on workstations based on any operating system.
After
you have defined a user and its password, you use these values as
follows in the definitions of job types with advanced options:
- The value in USRNAM
- In the JOBREC job definition statement, it is specified as the value of the JOBUSR keyword.
- In the definition panel of the job in the Dynamic Workload Console it
is specified in the
User Name
field of theCredentials
section.
- The value in USRPSW
- Is resolved at run time if you:
- Specify
Y
for the JOBPWD keyword in the JOBREC job definition statement. - Select
User
in thePassword type
widget that is displayed by clicking the ellipsis (...) located by thePassword
field in theCredentials
section of the job definition panel in the Dynamic Workload Console.
- Specify
Format
Parameters
- USRCPU(cpu name)
- The IBM Workload Scheduler workstation on which the user can launch jobs. It consists of four alphanumeric characters, starting with a letter.
- USRNAM(logon ID)
- The user name of a Windows workstation or the name of the user
authorized to run a job type with advanced options. The name is case-sensitive
and can be of up to 47 characters. If you are defining a user that will run native jobs on Windows workstations, note that:
- The name can include a domain name and might be case-sensitive, depending on the Windows version.
- The user must be able to log on to the computer on which IBM Workload Scheduler has launched jobs, and must also be authorized to Log on as batch.
- If the name is not unique in Windows, it is considered to be either a local user, a domain user, or a trusted domain user, in that order.
- If you are defining a Windows domain
user and the value contains a backslash (\), then the entire character
string must be enclosed by single quotes, for example:
USRNAM('XXXXX\user1')
- If you are defining a Windows user
in the username@internet_domain format that contains
the at sign (@), for example administrator@mywindom.com,
you must enclose the entire character string in single quotes:
USRNAM('administrator@mywindom.com')
- USRPSW(password)
- The
password for the user specified in USRNAM. It can consist of up to 31 characters and
must be enclosed in single quotation marks. It is case-sensitive.
The password is stored in the USRINFO member in plaintext, meaning that it is not encrypted. To encrypt it, run the sample provided in the EQQBENCR member of the EQQSAMP library.
If the password is for a user that will run native jobs on Windows workstations, note that:- The password might be case-sensitive, depending on the Windows version.
- If you are defining a Windows domain
user and the value contains a backslash (\), then the entire character string must
be enclosed by single quotes, for example:
USRPSW('XXXXX\password1')
- If you are defining a password for the Windows user in the
username@internet_domain format that contains the at sign
(@), for example administrator@mywindom.com, you must
enclose the entire character string in single quotes:
USRPSW('passw0rd')